Close X
Sunday, September 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

Canada Sending Several Dozen Military Advisers To Iraq As NATO Ramps Up Defences

Murray Brewster, The Canadian Press, 05 Sep, 2014 12:34 PM
    NEWPORT, United Kingdom - Prime Minister Stephen Harper quietly bowed out of the NATO Summit on Friday, announcing a commitment of military advisers for Iraq but skipping a photo-op meant as a display of solidarity in the face of growing international threats in eastern Europe and the Middle East.
     
    Other leaders joked and chatted as transport planes and a flight of fighter jets — including a Canadian CF-18 — swooped low over the rolling Welsh countryside in a demonstration of military precision meant as a signal to both a resurgent Russia and Islamic extremists.
     
    Harper didn't attend, but instead sat down with a handful of his officials in the nearby meeting hall before the morning session, which was meant to put the finishing touches on NATO plans to respond to Russian aggression in Ukraine.
     
    Before his departure, Harper announced the 30-day deployment of several dozen military advisers to Iraq to work with U.S. forces providing tactical guidance to Iraqi troops and Kurdish fighters battling the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant, a brutal al-Qaida splinter group.
     
    Those advisers are expected to be drawn from the Canadian Special Operations Regiment. Two Canadian military cargo planes are also ferrying weapons to the Kurds.
     
    The prime minister said the new deployment is not without risk, but it's not a combat mission, something for which the Conservatives have traditionally sought the blessing of Parliament.
     
    He also signalled very clearly that it's not the end of allied action, and that Canada would evaluate further participation as events unfold.
     
    "The measures taken to date, particularly in the north of Iraq, have certainly been successful in halting the advance of ISIL and to some degree pushing back on it," Harper said. "But this is far from truly turning back the advance of ISIL or diminishing its long-term threat."
     
    The allies are also considering further sanctions on Russia, which Canada fully supports, he added.
     
    Despite being one of the harshest critics of President Vladimir Putin's actions, the prime minister was not part of a Thursday meeting with Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko convened by the U.S., Britain, Germany, Italy and France.
     
    Harper later met separately with Poroshenko, French President Francois Hollande and British Prime Minister David Cameron, whose opening remarks on Friday underlined another sore point, a call for NATO members to increase defence spending to a consistent level.
     
    "We must increase capacity," Cameron said. "I hope today we can reaffirm our public commitment to spend two per cent of our GDP in defence and 20 per cent of that money on equipment. This will send a strong message to those who threaten us that our collective resolve is as strong as ever."
     
    Harper resisted the call even before the summit, with his staff declaring it an "arbitrary target" while the prime minister told a British business audience that a nation should be measured by its contribution, not by how much it spends.
     
    The defence budget will increase, as will the tempo of operations for the military, he said on Friday.
     
    "I don't, in any area of government, set a budget and say we'll spend a certain amount and go out and try to spend it no matter how we can spend it," Harper said during his only question-and-answer session with Canadian journalists.
     
    "That's not how we do business and I'm certainly not going spend on a massive military expansion for the sake of doing so. As I say, our allies can be assured and are assured that Canada will spend what is necessary."
     
    NATO rolled out plans Friday to bolster its rapid reaction forces, which will be capable of deploying to countries under Russian threat within days. The alliance's military leaders are still working out the details, including a spearhead force of ultra-high readiness troops.
     
    Harper made no immediate commitment to this effort, saying he has seen "very little in the way of detail." He said he wants to see plans take shape before deciding to spend money on them.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Sam Hughes, Canada's minister of militia in 1914 was bombastic, eccentric

    Sam Hughes, Canada's minister of militia in 1914 was bombastic, eccentric
    OTTAWA - Sir Sam Hughes, Canada's minister of militia at the start of the First World War, was a bombastic bigot who despised Roman Catholics, French Canadians and professional military officers.

    Sam Hughes, Canada's minister of militia in 1914 was bombastic, eccentric

    Man with donated kidney cycles across Canada to spread organ donation awareness

    Man with donated kidney cycles across Canada to spread organ donation awareness
    Every day this summer, Ron Hahn is cycling 90 kilometres to show Canadians the difference a kidney can make.

    Man with donated kidney cycles across Canada to spread organ donation awareness

    Flow from breached B.C. tailings pond in Cariboo region reduced

    Flow from breached B.C. tailings pond in Cariboo region reduced
    LIKELY, B.C. - Government said there has been a dramatic drop in the amount of material leaking from a breached tailings pond that contaminated waterways in the province's Cariboo region.

    Flow from breached B.C. tailings pond in Cariboo region reduced

    Keystone climate impacts could be higher than State Department estimate

    Keystone climate impacts could be higher than State Department estimate
    An economic analysis of the proposed Keystone XL pipeline's possible climate impacts has concluded they could be up to four times higher than previously estimated.

    Keystone climate impacts could be higher than State Department estimate

    Silicon Valley North: Vancouver tech surges as U.S. immigration reform idles

    Silicon Valley North: Vancouver tech surges as U.S. immigration reform idles
    Software engineer Pablo Guana nearly refused a job with Facebook when the company redirected him to Vancouver from Silicon Valley because his United States visa...

    Silicon Valley North: Vancouver tech surges as U.S. immigration reform idles

    Patient in Brampton hospital isolation unit tests negative for Ebola

    Patient in Brampton hospital isolation unit tests negative for Ebola
    A patient who was placed in the Isolation unit of a Toronto-area hospital has tested negative for the often deadly Ebola virus....

    Patient in Brampton hospital isolation unit tests negative for Ebola